INTERIOR Changing the heater core in your 94-02 Dodge Ram has usually meant removing the entire dash and instrument panel, and then removing the heating-ventilating-air conditioning (HVAC) from the firewall. While still not easy and it is tedious and time-consuming, we have found a way to replace the heater core without having to discharge the air conditioning freon and without disconnecting the wiring harness so there s far less problems getting everything back together correctly. **These instructions are specific to the 94-97 Dodge Ram, but 98-02 trucks are similar. First, let s cover the underhood steps. DISASSEMBLY 1. Drain the cooling system into a five-gallon bucket. Remove the drain cock and check the sealing O-ring. If it is torn, get a new one and grease with silicone grease. 2. Remove the heater hoses from the heater core at the firewall. The heater core pipes are soft brass and will distort easily. The hoses will be tightly stuck on the pipes, and you will probably have to cut the hoses and peel them off the pipes. 3. Remove the three screws holding the powertrain control module (PCM computer) to its bracket on the firewall. You don t need to disconnect the wiring harness, just move the PCM out of the way. 4. Remove the two AC joint clips by popping them off the connections near the firewall. Remove the AC drier clamp from the bracket, and then remove the 11mm nut that holds the bracket to the PCM mounting plate and the firewall. This stud also mounts the HVAC box it goes through the firewall and attaches to the HVAC box. There are three more 11mm nuts to remove: one near the valve cover, another near the top of the drier, and the last is accessible through a slot in the PCM mounting bracket toward the outside of the truck. These steps will allow the pipes to pull into the cab of the truck with the HVAC box just enough so the heater core pipes will clear the firewall on the inside of the cab. View under the hood of a partially disassembled truck. The positions of the four HVAC box mounting nuts are shown by arrows. If you need more assistance, we are only a phone call away. (770) 886-2500 Monday Friday 8:30am 5:30pm EST GENO S GARAGE, INC. 1150 Samples Industrial Drive Cumming, Georgia 30041
EXTERIOR PAGE 2 Second, the removal procedures that take place inside the cab of the truck. 1. Remove the kick panels that are integral with the door sills. This will allow you better access to the two 13mm bolts (one left side, one right side) at the bottom corners of the dash that mount it to the sides of the cab. Remove these two bolts. 2. You should remove one screw that mounts the parking brake release for better access to the bolt. There is also a ground strap behind the right kick panel. Remove this screw. 3. Remove the two Phillips screws holding the airbag module plastic cover to the module, and pop the cover off (it has a snap fastener at the top center). Remove the four 10mm bolts that mount the airbag control module to the transmission tunnel of the floor. Factory cuts in the carpet allow it to be folded out of the way for access to the bolts. The bolts have Loctite on them, so they are difficult to turn. The module can now slide out of the way so the HVAC box has more room to move away from the firewall. 4. Remove the screws holding the knee blocker (the panel under the steering column) and remove it. Some trucks, such as Club Cabs, may have a reinforcement plate that comes close to the steering column. Remove the screws that hold it so that it can move out of the way as the dash is moved when the steering column is dropped. 5. Remove the two 10mm nuts holding the steering column to the dash bracket, allowing the column to drop. The steering wheel will rest on the seat. Knee blocker is removed.
EXTERIOR PAGE 3 Air bag module and cover. The snap attachment of the cover and the four mounting bolts are shown. 6. Now you can remove the five 8mm sheet-metal screws with captured washers that hold the dash assembly to the cab just below the windshield. Now the dash will swing away from the firewall just enough so you can access the HVAC box from the right side of the truck. 7. Remove two 10mm nuts, one on a vertical stud at the far right near the top of the box, and one on a horizontal stud coming out of the firewall, above the box and to the right of the heater core pipes. This second nut also secures a ground strap to the cab firewall stud. 8. The other end of the strap is attached to the bracket holding the heater core pipes to the HVAC box. Remove the two Phillips-headed screws and the bracket and strap. Now remove another 10mm nut from the same firewall stud that the ground strap was attached to. Finally, the HVAC box can be pulled away from the firewall. Dash assembly is pulled away from the windshield.
PAGE 4 9. You may have to go back under the hood to be sure the AC pipes are feeding through the firewall without binding the pipes elsewhere under the hood. 10. You will be able to pull the HVAC box away just enough to remove the single Phillips-head screw holding a second bracket to the pipes and HVAC box, right near the firewall. You can now slide the heater core upward, just clearing the firewall and cab under the windshield. You may need to cut the black plastic/foam insulating pad on the firewall inside the cab to pull the heater core pipes up. There is not much clearance for the pipes, because you did not disassemble the truck as far as the factory told you! Some aftermarket replacement heater cores have flexible joints in the pipes to facilitate installation, but an OEM Mopar heater core has the the rigid brass pipes that are soldered to the top tank of the core. View of the HVAC box with the dashboard assembly removed. Two mounting nut positions are indicated by arrows. Another view of the HVAC box with the dashboard assembly removed. Two mounting nut positions are indicated by arrows.
PAGE 5 Extent of access to the HVAC box is shown here. View behind the dash of the HVAC box. Two mounting nut positions are indicated by arrows. REASSEMBLY The replacement process is basically the reverse of the above. 1. Be sure the heater core pipes lie against the supports molded into the HVAC box without strain, or the solder holding the pipes to the heater core end tank will give up and they will leak later. You don t want to do this job again, do you? 2. Reinstall the mounting brackets and ground strap. Note that the HVAC box may give you a struggle to get it back through the firewall. It can help to have another M6 x 1.0 threaded nut that has threads all the way through it, so you can secure one stud after you get it a little way through the firewall. The stock nuts have the threads recessed beyond the integral coned washer, so you need a lot of stud protrusion to use it.
PAGE 6 3. Once you finally have all four studs through the firewall, you can secure the HVAC box, making sure the tongue of the box is over the stud that holds the ground strap; and you can put a nut on the vertical stud inside the cab near the right door frame. Replace the three nuts that hold the HVAC box from behind the dash. HVAC box removed from the truck. Heater core and attached pipes are approximately in the center. 4. The dashboard assembly is heavy and awkward. First replace the two 13mm bolts at the bottom corners, but do not tighten them. 5. From the driver s side, hold the dash up with your knees while lifting the steering column. Loosely install the two 10mm nuts so the steering column will help support the dash assembly. 6. The outer four screws holding the dash to the cab go into nylon inserts in the cab. The center one does not have an insert, but it has a steel strap (part of the dash assembly reinforcement bracketry) that the screw goes through. It is easier to position the dash for installation of this screw if the two right hand screws are not yet installed. This center position is difficult to get into place. You might find it easier if you carefully grind a point on the end of that screw (they come from the factory with blunt ends). 7. Once the dashboard and instrument cluster assembly are in place, go back and tighten the fasteners that you left loose. Then put the truck back together. Only two wires disconnected in the process; one ground wire behind the right kick panel, and one ground strap for the heater core to cab. There is enough flex everywhere else, albeit only just enough. We drained coolant, but that was an obvious thing to do when replacing the heater core. I did not have to discharge the air conditioning freon. If you are lucky and/or skillful, you did not get cut on sharp edges, or suffer too much while wrestling the HVAC box and the dash back into position. We suggest that you study the photographs closely, because the job is daunting if you don t know where the mounting attachments are hidden.
PAGE 7 Below is a list of sizes of sockets, etc., you will need for various positions. Firewall, under hood POSITION PURPOSE NUMBER SIZE PCM computer mounting A/C drier mount A/C drier bracket/hvac stud and nut HVAC studs and nuts 3 1 1 3 more 8mm 8mm 11mm 11mm Airbag Module Attach plastic cover to module 2 #2 phillips Floor tunnel near shifter (if manual transmission) Airbag module mounting to floor 4 10mm Door sills 4 left, 4 right #2 phillips Under steering column Knee blocker attachment 2 to 5 depending on year #2 phillips Kick panels Integral with above 1 left, 1 right #2 phillips Under steering column Top of dash Dash reinforcement (Club Cab) Steering column nuts Mounts dash to truck body under the windshield 6 2 #2 phillips 10mm 5 10mm Bottom corners of dash Mounts dash to truck body at sides 2 13mm Bottom corner of dash, left side Mount screw for parking brake release 1 #2 phillips Top center of HVAC behind dash Mounts ground strap 1 10mm Top center of HVAC under above nut Mounts HVAC to firewall 1 10mm Top right of HVAC, behind dash Mounts HVAC to firewall 1 10mm Top center of HVAC Mounts heater core pipes and ground strap to HVAC box Mounts heater core pipes to HVAC box near firewall 1 2 #2 phillips